Treatment Overview
Treatment options for
bacterial vaginosis include:
- Watchful
waiting. In about 1 out of 4 women, bacterial vaginosis symptoms resolve
on their own.1 This happens when the vaginal
lactobacilli organisms increase to their normal levels, and other bacteria
levels drop.
- Antibiotic medication (oral or
vaginal). Antibiotics can kill the problem bacteria causing bacterial
vaginosis symptoms but sometimes don't reverse the underlying cause. Therefore,
symptoms recur in about 1 out of 3 of women after antibiotic treatment.2
For some women, bacterial vaginosis goes away without treatment.
But, when it does not go away even with treatment, bacterial vaginosis is
frustrating and troublesome. And, it can lead to preterm labour if you have it
during pregnancy. If present during pelvic surgery or invasive vaginal
procedures, bacterial vaginosis makes the reproductive tract vulnerable to
infection or inflammation, which has been linked to such problems as
pelvic inflammatory disease (PID).5 Therefore, your health professional will test and treat you
with antibiotics for bacterial vaginosis if you are:
- Having persistent symptoms.
- Pregnant and have symptoms.
- Pregnant with
no symptoms, but have a history of preterm labour (before 37 completed weeks of
pregnancy) that may have been related to infection.7
- Planning to have a
hysterectomy or surgical abortion. Treating bacterial
vaginosis with antibiotics beforehand greatly lowers your risk of getting a
serious infection afterward. Other procedures linked to bacterial
vaginosis-related infection include
endometrial biopsy,
intrauterine device (IUD) placement,
caesarean section,
dilation and curettage (D&C), and
hysterosalpingography, an X-ray test that examines the
inside of the uterus, the fallopian tubes, and surrounding area.
5
Talk to your health professional about whether screening is right
for you.
What To Think About
If you are planning to become pregnant and have a history or
symptoms of bacterial vaginosis, talk to your health professional about
screening and treatment before you start a pregnancy.
For decades, some women have used Lactobacillus
acidophilus in yogourt or supplements to treat bacterial vaginosis.
However, experts now know that dairy lactobacillus is not the kind that
normally lives in the vagina. This is why dairy lactobacillus does not work for
bacterial vaginosis. But, researchers have found that two different types of
lactobacillus—L. crispatus and L.
jensenii—are most commonly found in a healthy vaginal environment.
Research is now focusing on using these types of lactobacilli in
capsules.8
If your health professional finds other problems during the
examination, such as a possible
sexually transmitted infection (STI), appropriate
treatment will be recommended.
Since it probably is not passed between a man and woman, treating
a male sex partner or partners will not help cure bacterial vaginosis.5 But, for a woman with a female sex partner, it is possible
that bacterial vaginosis is passed back and forth, although this is not yet
proven. In this case, treating both partners may help.